Eye health centre
Foreign body eye treatment
Self-care at home
You should be able to care for minor debris in your eye at home. If you have trouble removing something in your eye or if a larger or sharper object is involved, you should seek medical attention. If you are wearing a contact lens, it should be removed before trying to remove the foreign body. Do not put the contact lens back into your eye until your eye is completely healed.
For minor foreign bodies, such as an eyelash, home care should be adequate.
Keratoplasty eye surgery (ALK) for myopia and hyperopia
Automated lamellar keratoplasty eye surgery, or ALK, is a surgical procedure used to correct vision in people with severe short-sightedness and mild degrees of far-sightedness. However, ALK is no longer routinely performed due to more predictable results from other vision correction procedures.
Read the Keratoplasty eye surgery (ALK) for myopia and hyperopia article > >
Begin by rinsing your eye with a saline solution (the same solution used to rinse contact lenses). Tap water or distilled water may be used if no saline solution is available. Water will effectively flush out your eye, but the chlorine in most tap water can cause varying levels of irritation. How you wash out your eye is less important than getting it washed out with great amounts of water.
- A water fountain makes a good eye wash. Just lean over the fountain, turn on the water and keep your eye open.
- At a sink, stand over the sink, cup your hands and put your face into the running water.
- Hold a glass of water to your eye and tip your head back. Do this many times.
- If you are near a shower, get in and put your eye under the running water.
- If you are working outside, a garden hose running at a very modest flow will work.
If washing out your eye is not successful, the object can usually be removed with the tip of a tissue or a cotton bud, without touching the eye itself.
- Pull back the eyelid by pulling down on the bottom edge of the lower lid or by pulling up on the upper edge of the upper lid.
- Look up when evaluating for a foreign body under the lower lid.
- Look down when evaluating for a foreign body under the upper lid. You will often need someone to help you in this case.
- Be very careful not to scrape the tissue or the cotton bud across your cornea, the clear dome over the iris.
For larger foreign bodies or metal pieces, you should seek medical care, even if you are able to safely remove them at home.
- If the foreign body is easily accessible and has not penetrated your eyeball, you may be able to remove it carefully with a cotton bud or a tissue.
- If you have any question about penetration of the eye, do not remove the object without medical assistance.
- If you cannot remove the object or if you continue to have the sensation that something is in your eye even after the debris is removed, you should seek medical care.
WebMD Medical Reference

